
Figurative Language
Presentation
•
English
•
9th Grade
•
Hard
Joseph Anderson
FREE Resource
17 Slides • 11 Questions
1
Figurative
Language
Notes are highlighted in yellow
2
Objectives
After this lesson, students will be able to:
● Recognize figurative vs literal language
● Define and identify figurative language in
text
3
Literal Vs Figurative
Language
Literal Language:language used to mean exactly
what is written.
The car is blue.
He caught the football.
Figurative Language: Does not mean what it
says. You have to figure out what it means
I’ve got your back.
You’re a doll.
4
Figurative or Literal?
1. It was raining cats and dogs.
2. I was hungry, so I ate a big breakfast.
3. The sky was as bright as a diamond.
4. Wow! She is as fast as a cheetah!
5. My mom was late to the concert.
6. Mr. Smith and Ms. Dennehy are as busy as bees!
7. The meadow is calm and quiet.
8. I bought new shoes for school and they cost me an arm and a
leg!
9. We had two snow days last week.
10. Over the weekend, I ran 6 miles in a race.
5
Simile
• comparing two unlike things using the
words “like” or “as”.
Her eyes were like stars.
Susan is as gentle as a
kitten.
6
Important Notes!!!
Using “like” or “as” doesn’t make a
simile.
A comparison must be made.
Not a Simile:I like pizza.
Simile:The moon is like a pizza.
7
Metaphor
• comparing two unlike things without
using like or as. Calling one thing,
another. Saying one thing is
something else.
He’s a lion when he fights.
Her eyes were sparkling
emeralds.
He is a shining star.
8
Personification
• giving human characteristics to
things that are not human.
The angry flood waters
slapped the house.
The sun smiled down on us.
9
Hyperbole
• EXTREME OVER EXAGGERATION an
exaggeration so dramatic, no one
could believe it.
This bag weighs a ton!
I’ve told you a million
times to clean up your
room!
10
Understatement
• A statement that says something as
smaller or less important or strong
as it really is
• The opposite of hyperbole.
I’ll be there in one second.
This won’t hurt a bit.
11
Alliteration
repeating the same CONSONANT
letter or sound....including tongue
twisters.
Miss Warren was worried
when Wendy was waiting.
Rubber baby buggy bumpers.
Peter Piper picked a peck of
pickled peppers.
12
Alliteration in Poetry
A flea and a fly in a flue
Were imprisoned, so what could they
do?
Said the fly, “Let us flee!”
“Let us fly,” said the flea;
So they flew through a flaw in the flue.
13
Oxymoron
two words or phrases used together
that have, or seem to have, opposite
meanings
Examples: Freezer burn pretty ugly
jumbo shrimp
act naturally
sweet and sour
climb down
14
Onomatopoeia
• the use of a word to describe or
imitate a natural sound made by an
object or action. (Batman Words)
pow
hiss
tweet,
tweet
buzz
zoom
15
Imagery
■ vivid description that appeals to a
readers’ 5 senses to create an image
or idea in their head.
• Sight
• Hearing
• Smell
• Touch
• Taste
Imagery
●
It was dark and dim in the forest.
●
The children were screaming and
shouting in the fields. ...
●
He whiffed the aroma of brewed
coffee. ...
●
The girl ran her hands on a soft
satin fabric. ...
●
The fresh and juicy orange is very
cold and sweet.
16
Idiom
A popular saying/expression
Examples:Choose 3 examples to
write
• it’s raining cats and dogs
• it cost an arm and a leg
• I’m feeling under the weather
• once in a blue moon
• I’m with you through thick and
thin
17
Allusion
a brief reference to a well-known
person, place, object event, character,
or to another work of literature
Examples: “I don’t know him from Adam.”
He tried to be firm with his daughter, but
her tears were like his Kryptonite.
18
Multiple Choice
The street cars are like frosted cakes covered
with snowflakes.
Simile
Metaphor
onomatopoeia
19
Multiple Choice
The west wind dances down the road.
hyperbole
oxymoron
personification
20
Multiple Choice
A train is a dragon that roars through the dark.
metaphor
oxymoron
metaphor and personification
21
Multiple Choice
The band played to a small crowd at the concert.
allusion
oxymoron
hyperbole
22
Multiple Choice
Sam suddenly stretched slowly.
allusion
alliteration
hyperbole
23
Multiple Choice
She’s as tiny as a mouse.
simile
metaphor
hyperbole
24
Multiple Choice
She’s a real Einstein.
simile
personification
allusion
25
Multiple Choice
I've told you a million times to clean your room
alliteration
metaphor
hyperbole
26
Multiple Choice
The wind whooshed down the street
onomatopoeia
metaphor
alluson
27
Multiple Choice
Don't worry, I've got your back
allusion
personification
Idiom
28
Multiple Choice
The kite drank the wind and laughed across the
sky.
simile
personification
alluson
Figurative
Language
Notes are highlighted in yellow
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